In Iran, this is great - in the US, the feds are after you
Wired has the story of a man we first heard tell of from Portland anarchist Paul McCarrier after the G-20 protests:
a man who used Twitter to communicate and help protestors rally against
an organization he believes is a threat to human rights.
No, this isn't those Twitter-fueled Iran protests, which the State Department famously asked Twitter to delay site maintenance to support. This is an American citizen, on American soil, using technology to protest.
And,
as both McCarrier and the Wired writer point out, the irony is clear
and direct. If this was an Iranian being jailed, searched, his
computers seized by the authorities for using Twitter in a protest, the
Obama administration would be outraged and objecting.
But since
it's an American protesting against the G-20, which includes the US,
the feds are trampling all over his rights, including his
patient-client privacy rights, because he is a social worker.